He never whined publicly about losing out on the starting QB position in 2010 and again this season, when he was a strong candidate both times.

He easily could have transferred out a couple of months ago in late July/early August, when the NCAA sanctions hit and made transferring as enticing as possible. But he stayed. (Heck, many were surprised he didn't transfer in 2010-11.)

Surely Jones had some suitors courting him then. In fact, Jones' connections are probably in touch with those suitors right now. (Hard not to imagine at least one of the eight Illinois coaches who recruited PSU players in State College a couple months back didn't offer Jones a ride to Champaign.)

But Jones, a 4- or 5-star recruit depending on what recruiting website you subscribe to, stuck with Penn State through it all. He was willing to begin this fall as Matt McGloin's backup, to roll the dice and see what would happen as the No. 2 QB.

At the least, it seemed likely he would be used intermittently this season for his size/athleticism - he's 6-3, 258 - whenever the situation warranted someone a lot more athletically imposing than McGloin. Such as on the QB sneaks new head coach Bill O'Brien likes to run on 4th down.

It seemed Jones finally had gotten to the point where he could enjoy a season of football and contribute.

Year 1, he redshirted. Year 2, he was ineligible. Year 3, Jones was set to make an impact.

He had been knocked down a peg in the spring when McGloin beat him out for the starting position in O'Brien's new offense.

He was knocked down another peg a few weeks ago when O'Brien decided Jones had a better future at tight end, moved him there, and promoted true freshman Steven Bench to the No. 2 QB spot.

Jones was no longer a key cog on the team. He was moonlighting as a QB now, the No. 3 QB. His main position at PSU was TE, and for the moment he was a backup there, too.

He might have become one great one. From a talent-standpoint, Jones seems to have all the tools to make an outstanding TE. He is a good all-around athlete who played basketball and baseball in high school. But there's suddenly a crowded depth chart at TE despite O'Brien's liberal usage of the position, with multiple TEs on many plays. And super-recruit Adam Breneman should be arriving on campus in the spring.

So despite his obvious potential at TE, there were no guarantees Jones would crack the playing rotation. The past two weeks he touched the field infrequently, making one catch.

So his on-field future at PSU was uncertain. His range of potential contribution seemed as vast as it gets, running the gamut from virtually nil to future All-Big Ten performer.

But he also was a symbol, or at least potentially was a big symbol: He was a guy who had endured a lot, kept moving forward and working hard, stuck with the program through the scandal and sanctions and coaching decisions that went against him, and could be a representative of the current players buying into, and having faith in, the new coaching staff.

By accepting the move to TE, Jones had boosted the credibility of the new coaches. If he had excelled at TE, it would have provided a bigger boost.

His leaving doesn't diminish that credibility - Jones simply wants to play QB. It's just sad that after everything, he won't finish his career as a Nittany Lion, and we'll never know about his TE skills.

Considering how much Jones had invested in being a QB, he deserves a lot of credit for at least trying the position switch for a few weeks. Yes, he should have tried it a little longer - he seemed destined to make a few big plays catching the ball for the Lions this season instead of throwing it. And now he'll never know how good he could have been at TE, or how much he might have liked it, if he had given it a little more time

Another reason for PSU fans to like Jones: He was a super-early commitment to the Lions in early 2009. He enrolled at PSU early, in January 2010, and he signed in February 2010.

The early commitments of Jones and Mike Hull helped trigger an excellent 2010 recruiting class.

Jones' PSU highlight might have been that first spring game, in 2010, when he completed 5-of-8 passes with two TDs, both to ... Kersey. (Perhaps Jones and Kersey will be working out together these next few months, maybe even transfer together.) Jones was still 17 years old that day and could have been in high school.

But it's all over now. His career ends having never taken a snap from center in a game, and without ever knowing how good he could have been at TE.

From the Penn State perspective it just feels sad.

Hopefully Jones can find a program that fits his skills as a QB - cannon arm, huge body, very athletic - and earn the starting position, and take it from there. He will have two years of eligibility left. It wouldn't be surprising if the NCAA granted him an extra year, due to how little he played this season and the NCAA's pernicious desire to encourage players to leave PSU.

If Jones never earns a starting QB spot somewhere, or flops if he does, he'll always wonder what might have been at PSU. He won't be alone.

But you can't fault a man for chasing his dreams.

For more insight, analysis and opinions about Penn State football, check RumblingsFromBeaverStadium.blogspot.com, or follow Pete Young on Twitter @AllPSUfootball.